AN EXHIBITION AT THE HEART OF INDUSTRIAL AND GEOPOLITICAL REALIGNMENTS
With four months to go before opening day, Eurosatory 2026 is already shaping up to be a pivotal edition. All the exhibition’s historic sectors are seeing strong growth. This momentum is accompanied by a structural shift: the exhibition now extends beyond the traditional scope of defence industrial and technological bases to fully embrace digital, responsible and sovereign economies. The rise of industrial cooperation, the emergence of open standards — in both hardware and software — and the powerful comeback of manufacturing industry alongside a consistently high-performing technology sector reflect a genuine paradigm shift. The 2026 edition heralds the transition from a start-up ecosystem to one of industrial deep tech: agile, reconfigurable and robust, with impacts extending far beyond the defence sector alone. In this context, Eurosatory confirms its global leadership across the full spectrum of challenges faced by States: defence, homeland security and civil security.
This transformation is also reflected in the nature of the innovations on display. Computing power, miniaturisation, artificial intelligence, new materials and scientific convergence are shaping an exhibition that helps define the future contours of the sector. New players illustrate the acceleration of innovations in remote warfare, the low-cost/high-tech challenge and the industrialisation of defence systems. Eurosatory has thus become a strategic showcase enabling States to rethink their industrial capabilities at the crossroads of military, civil and humanitarian applications.